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I'm with fiscx on this and, I could be wrong, but aren't some of you missing the point?
I don't want the faff of putting all my CDs onto my iPod
Surely the whole point of having an iPod is to put all your music collection on it including all of your CDs
I would have thought that the problem was the other way round in that if you want to play music in your car it was forcing you to buy an iPod
Is there a business model here for someone to rip CDs to MP3s, and set up an ITunes account for people who can't be bothered doing it themselves?
Receive a box of CDs, post them back and charge a fee per disk. In time you wouldn't need to rip much, you'd just use a copy you'd already done.
My question is has anyone been able to solve my problem, which is when i go fast around a corner the needle on my portable record player skips across the record making the music jump and ruining my old Decca records
I do video editing as part of my work, and the last upgrade of the VERY expensive software package had one major snag. DVD is dead - no support whatsoever for DVD production, and the actual DVD authoring program I've been using for years has been dropped. The manufacturers gave anyone who wanted it the latest version that did have DVD functions, but that is that. It has been dropped. All my work used to be on DVD, but now more and more people just take a £20 USB stick as their end product. Even bluray seems to be dying - nobody asked for that in fair while now. CD and DVD are just 8tracks, cassettes and Betamax now!
Of course you do, you've invested a lot of money. But you're wrong.I beg to differ with my system lol!
The music chart these days is basically the iTunes chart with little regard for the trickle of sales of physical media. So yes, as of now and going forward the largest audience is and will be digital.Are you suggesting that the "largest demographic" for listening to music in cars listens to it via non physical media as I believe that to be highly doubtful (excluding radio of course)
It's exactly the same thing, and in fact is arguably slightly less annoying as you at least have the option of not buying it all a second time, you can just rip it yourself at no cost.People did grumble about moving from cassette to CD but that was mainly because they were being forced to buy the same music all over again which isn't the same as being forced to convert your existing CDs into some other format as your new car no longer has a CD player
Of course you do, you've invested a lot of money. But you're wrong.![]()
The music chart these days is basically the iTunes chart with little regard for the trickle of sales of physical media. So yes, as of now and going forward the largest audience is and will be digital.
It doesn't matter, you're in a car and you have human hearing. The difference between a high bitrate mp3 and a CD will be imperceptible.Oh of course I am LOL! You know what I have then?
It doesn't matter, you're in a car and you have human hearing. The difference between a high bitrate mp3 and a CD will be imperceptible.
However, if you happen to have a fully sound-insulated echo chamber for a car then perhaps you might notice the different although I'd ask that you please stop driving it as you are a danger on the road.![]()
Also between my own car which has a £3k system in and my company car which has a bang and olufsen system in...... Yes I can indeed tell the difference![]()
I'd be surprised if it was legal. The law has only very recently allowed people to rip MP3s from their own CDs for personal use.
If someone's CDs were to be handed to a person who would rip them, then that would probably be considered illegal distribution - even if the CDs and MP3s are handed back to the owner. There would be nothing stopping the business owner from taking a copy of the music for themselves, and once that's done, the owner of the CDs would be liable for illegally distributing copyrighted content.
Basically, it's probably far too risky for the person who owns the CDs. Even the mere act of handing them over may be illegal.
I'd keep that quiet if I were you. Having a 3 grand system in the car is cool when you're 17. However, when you're an adult, not so cool.![]()
Although it was 20 years ago now, one of my final year projects at uni was working on an mp3 encoder so I have a vague understanding of it. I'm very clearly not saying there is no difference.Well I believe you may be slightly less hearing efficient. As my IT job is not my only occupation, I also DJ and produce music. The difference between a high bitrate mp3 and a WAV file are completely different. The variation in certain frequencies of bass are very apparent between the two. For you not to hear it would render you with a hearing impairment or just pure ignorance.
When I sound check for different DJs, I know whom are using WAV made CDs and those whom take the option of putting more tracks on a CD through MP3 or USB. These DJs have to have a completely different settings to those who use WAV from their own productions. So, through this experience..... Also between my own car which has a £3k system in and my company car which has a bang and olufsen system in...... Yes I can indeed tell the difference![]()
Although it was 20 years ago now, one of my final year projects at uni was working on an mp3 encoder so I have a vague understanding of it. I'm very clearly not saying there is no difference.
Now, we'll leave aside the fact that you're a DJ, and as such there's a good chance you've suffered a bit of damage to your hearing. But we shall presume that you are human and have human ears and are driving a non-insulated, standard car with an engine on a road and listening to music at a reasonable volume; the difference is not undetectable, but is, to a human, not noticeable.
To think otherwise is simply the bit of your brain that knows £3k for an in-car system is excessive trying to convince the other bit of your brain that believes it has super-human hearing, that it was a worthwhile purchase and not a waste. Placebo music if you will.![]()
Okay it's cool, I get it, either you can't understand or want to ignore that fact that I'm not talking about actual differences but perceptible differences in a particular far-from-ideal situation that features a lot of background noise. I guess it ends here then.Through certain compressions the difference is noticeable to the trained ear. Just like vinyl to CD is noticeable. There is no 'placebo' in noticing a bass frequency with your ears. You may also find in the last 20 years compression is a lot different to what it used to be![]()
...and people chiming in without actually reading the wording of the arguments.I see silly people are arguing over things they barely understand.
Okay it's cool, I get it, either you can't understand or want to ignore that fact that I'm not talking about actual differences but perceptible differences in a particular far-from-ideal situation that features a lot of background noise. I guess it ends here then.![]()
...and people chiming in without actually reading the wording of the arguments.![]()
You are both making statements that are either inaccurate or just wrong!
The money saving I referred to was disk space not physical for purchase of samples lol
Does this bother you?!
Not really, I am just bored with what I am supposed to be doing and find my amusement elsewhere!
It's either rag you two knuckleheads, or open the Nicki Minaj YouTube channel and crank up the volume (on a system that cost a hellavalot more than 3k) and bust a few moves!
LOL! Now..... Could you actually refer to my argument and tell me the difference in size of a high bitrate mp3 file to a wav?
It compresses at the very highest quality by a ratio of about 4:1 using a constant bit rate of 320 kilobits per second. Variable bitrate will, well, vary between 4:1 and 7:1.
But you two have achieved a milestone, by answering an age-old philosophical question that has puzzled some of the greatest thinkers of all time, starting with Plato.
At last we have an answer to the question - Do two people who don't know what they are talking about, know more or less than one person who doesn't know what he is talking about?